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Nov 15, 2012
11/12
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>> mike, it's tough to do this show in this environment. how have you been? >> caller: great. a big boo-yah from shippensburg university. >> a great school. many of my teachers from springfield high, montgomery county went there. what's up? >> caller: i have some stocks for you. apple, aapl. express scripts, esrx. humana, hum. verizon, vz. and exelon, exe. am i diversified? [ buzzer ] >> all right. here we go. apple is tech. exelon is utility. that's the old philly elec. and comoil -- seem to be committed to the dividend which is why it's going down. express scripts is a pharmacy benefits manager. verizon is telco. these two are too much alike. even though express scripts is down i want to get rid of that, pick up some more yield. i want to go with -- unless it's retired i want to go with the mark west which held up very well. master limited partnership. health care, utility. be careful of that yield. i'd prefer you to be in duke because they're not going to get rid of their dividend. apple's tech and verizon nice yield. give you a little yield protection and also a little les
>> mike, it's tough to do this show in this environment. how have you been? >> caller: great. a big boo-yah from shippensburg university. >> a great school. many of my teachers from springfield high, montgomery county went there. what's up? >> caller: i have some stocks for you. apple, aapl. express scripts, esrx. humana, hum. verizon, vz. and exelon, exe. am i diversified? [ buzzer ] >> all right. here we go. apple is tech. exelon is utility. that's the old philly...
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Jul 13, 2012
07/12
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in this environment a utility like duke is still better than the vast majority of nondomestic stocks out there. the house, eh. the neighborhood? killer! stay with cramer. >>> coming up, shark bait. the street thought this health care predator was primed to sink its teeth into a hot growth trend, but it took a dive after a horrific earnings miss. kram serer is inspecting the waters to find out how they got this one so wrong and protecting from you what else could be lurking. you what else could be lurking. you what else could be lurking. >>> lately, scary shark stories have been dominating the headlines. everything from a great white chasing a kayak off cape cod to a woman in south carolina who got her catch stolen by a bigger monster, but tonight i have one much scarier. there's blood in the water. listen up! you should never take your cue from the weakest player in an industry. that's true whether you're talking about food or retail or machinery or even robots. yes! robots! and, no, i'm not warning you to avoid investing in cyber dine, the fictional company in the terminator movies.
in this environment a utility like duke is still better than the vast majority of nondomestic stocks out there. the house, eh. the neighborhood? killer! stay with cramer. >>> coming up, shark bait. the street thought this health care predator was primed to sink its teeth into a hot growth trend, but it took a dive after a horrific earnings miss. kram serer is inspecting the waters to find out how they got this one so wrong and protecting from you what else could be lurking. you what...
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Jul 13, 2012
07/12
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and try bounty napkins. >>> how do you protect your wealth in this difficult environment? the playbook is simple. we want companies with three things, domestic security, meaning they don't have much, if any, international exposure, high yields, and consistent business models. that's why i want to introduce you to american realty company trust. company is not like other reits we talk about. arct owns 485 properties across 43 states and puerto rico and it has the sky high 100% occupancy ratio. how is that possible? company has a sale lease back business model meaning the tenants sell the real estate to american realty and they lease the property back to them. for example, let's say you're a company like walgreen's. you own a bunch of properties but you're really not a real estate company. walgreen's will sell the property to american realty to raise some capital and then rent it back on a long-term lease. this isn't a new idea but the sale lease back concept has become increasingly popular as cfos try to unlock capital. they don't have much ability to raise rates. you have t
and try bounty napkins. >>> how do you protect your wealth in this difficult environment? the playbook is simple. we want companies with three things, domestic security, meaning they don't have much, if any, international exposure, high yields, and consistent business models. that's why i want to introduce you to american realty company trust. company is not like other reits we talk about. arct owns 485 properties across 43 states and puerto rico and it has the sky high 100% occupancy...
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Apr 18, 2012
04/12
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so what's good for our business also happens to be good for the environment. and that's what we're all about. finding ways that we can do things that are both good for our business, but also good for the environment. >> i've been trying to explain to people that you in particular have an inner city based business. not just about the cost. but you fight -- i know in new york, there is inner city asthma, diseases, have you been able to cut back on possibly being linked to those kinds of things. >> absolutely. again, virtually zero air particulates and we're headquartered in houston and obviously a big drive in houston. places like new york city. not only are those zero air particulates, but these are loud trucks that are operating very early in the morning, so having a quieter truck is a good thing too. >> that's not one of yours. that's an arrival. >> wrong color. always look for the green truck, jim. >> i'm looking at $1.99. everyone in this country is saying you cannot reduce -- all the politicians, there there's no way to do anything to reduce the price of f
so what's good for our business also happens to be good for the environment. and that's what we're all about. finding ways that we can do things that are both good for our business, but also good for the environment. >> i've been trying to explain to people that you in particular have an inner city based business. not just about the cost. but you fight -- i know in new york, there is inner city asthma, diseases, have you been able to cut back on possibly being linked to those kinds of...
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Dec 18, 2012
12/12
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it can not rally in an environment where people think the economy is going to pick up big. let's go to mike. >> big booyah from shippensburg university. >> what is going on? >> peabody energy. in 2011 australian mining operations contributed to its growth. recently extreme policies undermined their mines. -- and had the highest growth rate in 2001. >> remember, in the end it is still coal. and it is on the decline. and i do believe the stock could be troughing, but if that is the case, why not buy joy global. it is a truly international company, and it is more likely to be acquired if it stays down here forever. they have a terrific book of maintenance that people don't talk about. i regard it as much cheaper than btu. >> booyah welcome to my world. i have glaxo what do you think about it? i think they came out with a new flu vaxine. >> we talked about these companies that aren't going to take off in an environment where people are getting bull issue in 2013. what the heck is going on with this market? if we bridge the cliff without too many spending cuts and too higher tax
it can not rally in an environment where people think the economy is going to pick up big. let's go to mike. >> big booyah from shippensburg university. >> what is going on? >> peabody energy. in 2011 australian mining operations contributed to its growth. recently extreme policies undermined their mines. -- and had the highest growth rate in 2001. >> remember, in the end it is still coal. and it is on the decline. and i do believe the stock could be troughing, but if...
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Apr 17, 2012
04/12
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WBAL
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we're destroying them permanently and getting them out of the environment. that's one way we're taking the nastiest of the materials out there and permanently eliminating them from the environment. >> all right. just because it is doing earth week here, what are some green initiatives that you see that are cost-effective and have a real impact on the environment that clean harbors is doing right now besides the incineration issue? >> i think converting our vehicles. we have 26,000 pieces of equipment, and all of our rolling stock, we would love to be able to begin the process of converting those to compressed natural gas as an example. we're recycling more material. we're taking things like waste oil, solvents out of the pharmaceutical industry, any type of chemical material, metals out of our transformers services business, anything that we can beneficially recycle and reuse is really part of what our sustainability program is, and we're doing some great things in that area. we're also investing in technology as you saw in our bridgeport facility, putting s
we're destroying them permanently and getting them out of the environment. that's one way we're taking the nastiest of the materials out there and permanently eliminating them from the environment. >> all right. just because it is doing earth week here, what are some green initiatives that you see that are cost-effective and have a real impact on the environment that clean harbors is doing right now besides the incineration issue? >> i think converting our vehicles. we have 26,000...
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Dec 22, 2012
12/12
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this is how they're doing in an okay but somewhat troubled environment. now, let's think about this. suppose the fiscal cliff gets resolved quickly without wrecking the economy. i think washington is the only thing standing in the way of a worldwide surge in growth and profits. not just in stocks but also in real estate. if you take washington out of the equation -- my job would be so much fun. blackstone should zoom higher. first off, if the fiscal cliff does get resolved people will pull money out of bonds. they should pull them out of bonds any way because deal if small will be inflationary. they're more likely to invest in aggressive alternatives with higher assets under management. for those of that you don't know, the private equity where you buy companies using borrowed money and you fix them up and flip them a few years later by taking them public. over the past two years, blackstone brought eight private companies in its portfolio public and in the next 12 months, they plan on doing another eight. it goes without saying that if we're in a bull ma
this is how they're doing in an okay but somewhat troubled environment. now, let's think about this. suppose the fiscal cliff gets resolved quickly without wrecking the economy. i think washington is the only thing standing in the way of a worldwide surge in growth and profits. not just in stocks but also in real estate. if you take washington out of the equation -- my job would be so much fun. blackstone should zoom higher. first off, if the fiscal cliff does get resolved people will pull...
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Sep 4, 2012
09/12
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the key to them is they care as much about the environment as much as anybody in the world cares. they don't want to do anything that's going to damage long-term business. what this transaction does is it not only makes us the largest in the business -- which is a brand-new segment, no one has done this before -- but it also gives us every major in the customer now a customer of ours. we can give them the service and the environmental help that they need, the environmental products that they need, the services that they need and keep them -- and keep the locals happy. >> what people are going to say at home who are not that familiar, the stock was a low dollar amount, they're going to say well, hold on. how the heck can one company that's smaller buy a bigger company? and how can those two together instantly start doing better? in other words, explain the economics. you're a deal manager. to the regular person, why a small can buy a larger one and how it all fits together. >> they're larger but not a lot larger. they have a ceo and a management team that's a tremendous management
the key to them is they care as much about the environment as much as anybody in the world cares. they don't want to do anything that's going to damage long-term business. what this transaction does is it not only makes us the largest in the business -- which is a brand-new segment, no one has done this before -- but it also gives us every major in the customer now a customer of ours. we can give them the service and the environmental help that they need, the environmental products that they...
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Oct 30, 2012
10/12
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an environment of high unemployment, slow wage growth, expensive gas prices, you better believe that consumers are still going to trade down to cheaper merchandise. and the merchandise is about as goo good as it gets. plus, imagine how good dollar general can do if washington pushes the economy back into a recession. not only would this company be immune to the pain, nor and more consumers would be forced to squeeze down even as our nation obviously would be hurt badly bypassing over the fiscal cliff. look, we've had a stagnant economy for ages. how come i'm recommending it now? the easy, it's cheap. it's fallen from its highs and thanks to equity investors have sold some of their shares. but mainly on account of the not so hot numbers we got from dollar tree. see, dollar tree cut its same-store sales guidance in the third quarter recently blaming high gasoline prices and the preholiday calendar shift. the forecast hammered the whole group. but i don't think their alibis add up. let's take them one at a time. first, higher gas prices. dollar tree blamed them for the weaker same-store
an environment of high unemployment, slow wage growth, expensive gas prices, you better believe that consumers are still going to trade down to cheaper merchandise. and the merchandise is about as goo good as it gets. plus, imagine how good dollar general can do if washington pushes the economy back into a recession. not only would this company be immune to the pain, nor and more consumers would be forced to squeeze down even as our nation obviously would be hurt badly bypassing over the fiscal...
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Nov 28, 2012
11/12
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the company has been executing fabulously in this currently lousy environment. the latest quarter incredibly strong. better than expected revenues. how many of those have you had? bye, b buy, buy, buy! they get half of their revenue from overseas. european exposure. but it doesn't seem to be hurting. vast majority is coming from organic growth. those are terrific numbers. but i don't believe that they're pie in the sky numbers by any means. when you have something like that, you're going to be able to take market share left and right or raise prices dramatically. either way it means you can crush the estimates. a number of the analyst who cover trimble think that the company's technology is necessary for the company's survival. plus during early innings, trimble's office equipment is very unpenetrated. remember sales force.com just had good numbers in europe because they're finally getting to penetrate. there's a lot of room to expand. trimble is growing at an incredibly rapid case. at some point once they get a big enough installed base, tre-the-can do upgrades
the company has been executing fabulously in this currently lousy environment. the latest quarter incredibly strong. better than expected revenues. how many of those have you had? bye, b buy, buy, buy! they get half of their revenue from overseas. european exposure. but it doesn't seem to be hurting. vast majority is coming from organic growth. those are terrific numbers. but i don't believe that they're pie in the sky numbers by any means. when you have something like that, you're going to be...
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Nov 20, 2012
11/12
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my question to you is, in this environment, with the economic environment, with the possibility of a compromise regarding the fiscal cliff, vis-a-vis the increased revenues and cuts in spending, what is your analysis and your opinion on the tax free municipal bonds at this juncture? >> i think you have to buy them. the individual is going to go right back to them and move them up. i think that's a great place to be. don't touch them. i want you to buy them. brilliant idea. now we go to paul in louisiana. paul? >> caller: hey, jim. thanks for taking my call. >> no problem. >> caller: i've been just getting in and sticking with a stock itw. i've been following it for a couple months. they seem to be doing pretty well. i gather there is going to be a change in the leadership. can you comment on their future? >> david spear passed away which is -- he was a terrific guy. this is a very well run company. i suspect that they won't really skip a beat. it's always been a favorite of mine. i would continue to own it. i wouldn't buy it off this. he was a good man. i think it's fine. i think it
my question to you is, in this environment, with the economic environment, with the possibility of a compromise regarding the fiscal cliff, vis-a-vis the increased revenues and cuts in spending, what is your analysis and your opinion on the tax free municipal bonds at this juncture? >> i think you have to buy them. the individual is going to go right back to them and move them up. i think that's a great place to be. don't touch them. i want you to buy them. brilliant idea. now we go to...
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Aug 1, 2012
08/12
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take morgan stanley's warnings about the macro environment hurting chico's seriously. long term i'm not backing away from chico's one bit. it's a fabulous story. stock is cheap. sells 12.6 times next year's earnings, 15% growth rate. that's a classic growth, a regional priced stock. chico's believes they can open 120 new stores per year through the next several years. that's fabulous. only bringing the store base up from about 1,300 to over 2,000. impressive. a main competitor, talbots, closing stores. that's good for them. chico's has a lot of room to expand its margins. in other words, so many positives here. so would i buy the stock ahead of the quarter? toughie. here's what i think. we get any strength between now and august 22nd, chico's runs up into the quarter, i would use the lift to take profits. ring the register. if the stock sells off after the quarter, go back at a lower price because i am not changing my view about the long term. here's the bottom line. sometime when two analysts disagree, they both can be right. piper jaffray upgraded chico's. i agree, t
take morgan stanley's warnings about the macro environment hurting chico's seriously. long term i'm not backing away from chico's one bit. it's a fabulous story. stock is cheap. sells 12.6 times next year's earnings, 15% growth rate. that's a classic growth, a regional priced stock. chico's believes they can open 120 new stores per year through the next several years. that's fabulous. only bringing the store base up from about 1,300 to over 2,000. impressive. a main competitor, talbots, closing...
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Nov 13, 2012
11/12
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WBAL
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even on the low end with more value oriented stores that should be thriving in an environment where lots of people are worried about their taxes going up year end and the fiscal cliff is starting to get top of mind. you have a stock like walmart which has been a juggernaut, going up in a straight line since april until the recent pullback. then there is a company like -- sell, sell, sell. jcpenney. if you thought things couldn't get worse for jcpenney under the ceo, well, you were very wrong. as the company missed estimates once again on friday, reporting absolutely hideous numbers, they were blinding. sure enough, penney's continued the decline today, down another $2.67, 13%. like the wheel of fortune, where she stops, nobody knows. far more important, just so you know, there is a piece of preferred, there is another corporate piece of paper affiliated with jcpenney and that is sinking like a stone. that is more valuable to tell how bad things at jcpenney are. johnson tried to revolutionize by getting rid of coupons, cutting price as cross the board, they failed tragically and they star
even on the low end with more value oriented stores that should be thriving in an environment where lots of people are worried about their taxes going up year end and the fiscal cliff is starting to get top of mind. you have a stock like walmart which has been a juggernaut, going up in a straight line since april until the recent pullback. then there is a company like -- sell, sell, sell. jcpenney. if you thought things couldn't get worse for jcpenney under the ceo, well, you were very wrong....
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May 25, 2012
05/12
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WBAL
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the bottom line, in this environment your portfolio needs to play defense, and that means owning stocks like b & g foods with its bountiful yield and total lack of european exposure. in this market, boring is beautiful. and that makes b & g among the best-looking stocks in the show. let's take a question. sir. >> hi, jim. i was actually on board harry s. truman when you came out in 2008, and i really appreciate the chance to get to see where you get to work. >> thank you very much. we were honored on on that fabulous aircraft carrier, and your hospitality was just fantastic. >> actually, my beautiful wife and i were wondering what is the return to market for burger king mean for competitors like mcdonald's and wendy's. >> we're doing a special show about that. we're going to call it the burger wars. we did coffee wars, we did donut wars recently. right now it looks like burger king is overvalued versus mcdonald's, undervalued versus wendy's. i think mcdonald's -- by the way, if you can get that at $90, $91, 3% yield, that is one worth putting away. that's my favorite stock in the group.
the bottom line, in this environment your portfolio needs to play defense, and that means owning stocks like b & g foods with its bountiful yield and total lack of european exposure. in this market, boring is beautiful. and that makes b & g among the best-looking stocks in the show. let's take a question. sir. >> hi, jim. i was actually on board harry s. truman when you came out in 2008, and i really appreciate the chance to get to see where you get to work. >> thank you...
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Nov 14, 2012
11/12
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it is the wrong stock for this environment. >> susan. >> how do you feel about exel? >> i like exel. and by the way, another one of -- another one of our specs, dbax, nice move today. remember, i am in favor of speculation as long as it's only one small piece of your portfolio. and that is the conclusion of and that is the conclusion of the lightning round. but whetr he's climbing everest, >>> everybody is freaking about about washington. the fiscal cliff is a man made problem that congress and the president created. if they would stop squabbling with each other they could solve this thing with the stroke of a pen. i'm not trying to minimize the scale of the problem. it could send our economy back into a recession. i'm going to keep going. people are saying why is this stock and that stock down. it is always the same. it is because the fiscal cliff. it is killing stocks. but you know what? some of the stocks that would be the worst hit, the defense contractors, are telling a different story. as a big part of the cliff, they are telling a different story. i'm talking a
it is the wrong stock for this environment. >> susan. >> how do you feel about exel? >> i like exel. and by the way, another one of -- another one of our specs, dbax, nice move today. remember, i am in favor of speculation as long as it's only one small piece of your portfolio. and that is the conclusion of and that is the conclusion of the lightning round. but whetr he's climbing everest, >>> everybody is freaking about about washington. the fiscal cliff is a man...
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May 24, 2012
05/12
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. ♪ [ applause ] >>> in this environment you absolutely need to play defense. you've got to play some d. that means loading up on stocks that are protected from the troubles in europe because they don't do any business there. and big dividends, which gives you yield support. that's the perfect defensive combination for this moment. where europe is in charge and we have no idea what will happen. yeah, we're up today because europe does something good. tomorrow they don't do anything good, we're down again. who has that combination of defense and dividend? how about cramer fave b & g foods? the small boring little packaged food company that's behind brands like ortega and lass palmas brand mexican food. cream of wheat. talk about boring. vermont-made syrup. b & m beans. b & g pickles. oh, yes. powder. good. b & g gives you a terrific 4.8% yield. domestic play that has zero exposure to europe. as a food company it's i a big beneficiary from the massive decline in commodity prices. that's come down big. that makes this the ideal stock for this fraught period. bng's
. ♪ [ applause ] >>> in this environment you absolutely need to play defense. you've got to play some d. that means loading up on stocks that are protected from the troubles in europe because they don't do any business there. and big dividends, which gives you yield support. that's the perfect defensive combination for this moment. where europe is in charge and we have no idea what will happen. yeah, we're up today because europe does something good. tomorrow they don't do anything...
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Nov 12, 2012
11/12
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if you want ones that works in the current environment, we had one of our favorite retail groups, sna, a company known as dress barn. they told an incredible story. no story. gallon, real story. a scene that doesn't dominate just one niche, they own a whole host of brands. the dominant players in multiple different categories. there is justice. there is justice. see, i told you. there's justice, chain of 942 stores for tween girls. then there is a place where they sell casual and dress apparel. and then cina closed on charming shops which makes it the number one player in the plus size apparel market. that's a huge market. half of women in this country are size 14 and up. don't tell them that. the charming shop was too fast growing plus size chains. this transaction is a big reason why i've been a fan of the stock. we know that asina has a great track record. that's what they did with maurice and justice. the initial guidance about the synergies from each deal turned out to be way too conservative. i think the same thing will happen with charming shops. isn't it interesting? jcpenney,
if you want ones that works in the current environment, we had one of our favorite retail groups, sna, a company known as dress barn. they told an incredible story. no story. gallon, real story. a scene that doesn't dominate just one niche, they own a whole host of brands. the dominant players in multiple different categories. there is justice. there is justice. see, i told you. there's justice, chain of 942 stores for tween girls. then there is a place where they sell casual and dress apparel....
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May 22, 2012
05/12
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degree of aggression grossly disproportionate to the circumstances and environment. all symptoms point to intermittent explosive disorder. >> higher! >> huh, might make a good middle linebacker. >> get out! >> this diagnosis by dr. dani from "necessary roughness," returns wednesday june 6th 10:00 on usa.
degree of aggression grossly disproportionate to the circumstances and environment. all symptoms point to intermittent explosive disorder. >> higher! >> huh, might make a good middle linebacker. >> get out! >> this diagnosis by dr. dani from "necessary roughness," returns wednesday june 6th 10:00 on usa.
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Nov 26, 2012
11/12
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don't forget, he's doing this in a hostile environment. britain is in an austerity induced recession now. you wouldn't think this is a great time to open a bank. hill's customer friendly model is so driven these big picture negatives don't seem to matter. hill's new book "fans, not customers: how to create growth companies in a no growth world" hit the u.s. shelves today. i recommend reading it. i have. when somebody is this good, you want to learn everything they have to teach you. this is like danny myers' book. okay? remember that one. "setting the table. ""let's talk to the man who's the greatest banker of his generation. mr. hill, welcome to "mad money." great to see you, vernon. have a seat. all right. now, i remember commerce as one of the greatest stocks i ever owned from my hedge fund. we can't get into metro yet, but describe what metro is doing. there hasn't been a lot of new banks in london in a long time. >> they're the first new bank in britain since 1830. 1830. and it's another commerce-type model. open, friendly, and inviti
don't forget, he's doing this in a hostile environment. britain is in an austerity induced recession now. you wouldn't think this is a great time to open a bank. hill's customer friendly model is so driven these big picture negatives don't seem to matter. hill's new book "fans, not customers: how to create growth companies in a no growth world" hit the u.s. shelves today. i recommend reading it. i have. when somebody is this good, you want to learn everything they have to teach you....
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Jul 26, 2012
07/12
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>> i can't do much about the macro environment. one thing we have done a great job is innovation, integration of the different technologies and chips enabled us to gain share. it means product cycles trumped the macro economic cycles for us. that's driving growth. >> i don't read enough technology quarters, i think i do. i saw a phrase that made my heart tremble for good reason. you used the term 5g. what the heck will that do that 4g can't do? second, how close? >> it's a new technology on the market. if you use wireless lan, this is a no-brainer. it's twice the performance. it's twice the range. it's lower power which means the cell phone battery lasts longer. we'll deliver that in phones this year. you will see a big ramp for the first half of next year. >> scott mcgregor from broadcom. thank you for the best semiconductor quarter i have seen. good luck. >> thank you, jim. >>> all right, look. this is a hard business. all right? i know everyone says, well, some day someone will say they have a better mousetrap. i have followed t
>> i can't do much about the macro environment. one thing we have done a great job is innovation, integration of the different technologies and chips enabled us to gain share. it means product cycles trumped the macro economic cycles for us. that's driving growth. >> i don't read enough technology quarters, i think i do. i saw a phrase that made my heart tremble for good reason. you used the term 5g. what the heck will that do that 4g can't do? second, how close? >> it's a new...
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Nov 14, 2012
11/12
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it is the wrong stock for this environment. >> susan. >> how do you feel about exel? >> i like exel. and by the way, another one of -- another one of our specs, dbax, nice move today. remember, i am in favor of speculation as long as it's only one small piece of your portfolio. and that is the conclusion of the lightning round. a febreze experiment. can a 30-day-old pluggable febreze make even this old container smell fresh? take a deep breath. describe the room that you're in. i think just like a big, open space. like i'm hanging the sheets on the line. and it smells really fresh, man. let's take your blindfold off. oh! [ both laugh ] super-weird! oh, is it febreze? yeah. ohh, how about that? febreze has anti-clogging technology that keeps it smelling fresh, even after 30 days. febreze. breathe happy. i have a cold, and i took nyquil, but i'm still "stubbed" up. [ male announcer ] truth is, nyquil doesn't unstuff your nose. what? [ male announcer ] it doesn't have a decongestant. no way. [ male announcer ] sorry. alka-seltzer plus fights your worst cold symptoms plus
it is the wrong stock for this environment. >> susan. >> how do you feel about exel? >> i like exel. and by the way, another one of -- another one of our specs, dbax, nice move today. remember, i am in favor of speculation as long as it's only one small piece of your portfolio. and that is the conclusion of the lightning round. a febreze experiment. can a 30-day-old pluggable febreze make even this old container smell fresh? take a deep breath. describe the room that you're...
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211
May 22, 2012
05/12
by
KNTV
tv
eye 211
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degree of aggression grossly disproportionate to the circumstances and environment. all symptoms point to intermittent explosive disorder. >> higher! >> huh, might make a good middle linebacker. >> get out! >> this diagnosis by dr. dani from "necessary roughness," returns wednesday june 6th 10:00 on usa. four kids, it can just be too expensive. yeah, so to save money we just made our own. oh no! what could be worse than ninety-foot swells?! typhoon! first prize! it's a cheese grater. wooooo... this isn't scary. are you kidding me? look at that picture of your mom's hair from the '80s. there's an easier way to save. wooohooo... geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. zero in to win and play subway battleship. get codes on 30oz cups for a chance to be one of thousands of winners daily. get your code today. and catch battleship in theaters, may 18th. subway. where winners eat. [ male announcer ] tough on sweat. ♪ not on skin. get powerful 48 hour sweat protection plus 1/4 moisturizer technology. only with dove men + care deodora
degree of aggression grossly disproportionate to the circumstances and environment. all symptoms point to intermittent explosive disorder. >> higher! >> huh, might make a good middle linebacker. >> get out! >> this diagnosis by dr. dani from "necessary roughness," returns wednesday june 6th 10:00 on usa. four kids, it can just be too expensive. yeah, so to save money we just made our own. oh no! what could be worse than ninety-foot swells?! typhoon! first...
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192
May 21, 2012
05/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 192
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grossly disproportionate to the circumstances and environment. all symptoms point to intermittent explosive disorder. >> higher! >> huh, might make a good middle linebacker. >> get out! >> this diagnosis by dr. dani from necessary roughness, returns wednesday 6:00 to 10:00 on usa. [ male announcer ] at scottrade, we believe the more you know, the better you trade. so we have ongoing webinars and interactive learning, plus, in-branch seminars at over 500 locations, where our dedicated support teams help you know more so your money can do more. [ rodger ] at scottrade, seven dollar trades are just the start. our teams have the information you want when you need it. it's another reason more investors are saying... [ all ] i'm with scottrade. [ male announcer ] we began with the rx. ♪ then we turned the page, creating the rx hybrid. ♪ now we've turned the page again with the all-new rx f sport. ♪ this is the next chapter for the rx. this is the next chapter for lexus. this is the pursuit of perfection. if you made a list of countries from aroun
grossly disproportionate to the circumstances and environment. all symptoms point to intermittent explosive disorder. >> higher! >> huh, might make a good middle linebacker. >> get out! >> this diagnosis by dr. dani from necessary roughness, returns wednesday 6:00 to 10:00 on usa. [ male announcer ] at scottrade, we believe the more you know, the better you trade. so we have ongoing webinars and interactive learning, plus, in-branch seminars at over 500 locations, where...
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199
May 10, 2012
05/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 199
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these aren't stocks with sizable dividends, another cohort which i think you know is perfect for this environment, as you will hear later in the show. they aren't so called countercyclicals like con ed, to mention growth utility that's given 7% return, or kimberly clark, the kleenex diaper paper towel maker, that hit a 52-week high today. they're terrific companies that rarely get put on sale. when it happens, i'm suggesting you do some buying. so let's go over this list of seven. first, a month ago i told you to buy the greatest growth stock of our time, apple. and sell off it has. plummeting to $570. s so what happened in the interim? apple reported its best quarter ever. i know there's a lot of chatter that iphone sales could slow because carriers are balking at subsidizing apple's handsets. i just came back from ctia in new orleans, the wireless conference. not long ago, sprint paid $15 billion for the privilege of selling iphones to its customer b base. just last night at the conference, ceo dan hesse told us the bet is already paying off big. if it's paying off big, what's the problem? i th
these aren't stocks with sizable dividends, another cohort which i think you know is perfect for this environment, as you will hear later in the show. they aren't so called countercyclicals like con ed, to mention growth utility that's given 7% return, or kimberly clark, the kleenex diaper paper towel maker, that hit a 52-week high today. they're terrific companies that rarely get put on sale. when it happens, i'm suggesting you do some buying. so let's go over this list of seven. first, a...
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170
Dec 3, 2012
12/12
by
CNBC
tv
eye 170
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we've seen how quickly facebook was able to adapt to the new mobile advertising environment, once google has seen that new rocketship, i see no reason why google should be any different. especially since google owns android. they need to figure out how to monetize it better. something the company is doing by releasing its own line of smartphones and tablets. google is sold out until after christmas. of the growth stocks, i got to admit i like google less than i did before the bad quarter if you're trying to figure out which of these stocks worries me the most, it's google, it's become a show-me situation. how about visa and master cad? both up decently since i recommended them in october. these are both plays in the worldwide switch from paper currency to plastic. visa and mastercard both reported strong quarters in october, they have healthy balance sheets. mastercard is winning new business all over the place. and visa announced a $1 billion buyback. even though visa has a new ceo, i'm a big fan of both stocks. i think they're both candidates to offer special dividends as the year unwi
we've seen how quickly facebook was able to adapt to the new mobile advertising environment, once google has seen that new rocketship, i see no reason why google should be any different. especially since google owns android. they need to figure out how to monetize it better. something the company is doing by releasing its own line of smartphones and tablets. google is sold out until after christmas. of the growth stocks, i got to admit i like google less than i did before the bad quarter if...
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180
May 10, 2012
05/12
by
WBAL
tv
eye 180
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>>> in the environment where the price of oil seems to be in a free fall, what are we supposed to do when they post a spectacular quarter? eog posted some terrific results last night. nearly rising a buck. should we do this as an opportunity where the markets blind to eog's fabulous fundamentals because they can't see past the falling price of crude, or is it a cautionary sign that no matter how well an oil company does, the stock will never be rewarded as long as the underlying commodity seems to be going lower at the moment? it depends a great deal on your own willingness to suffer from short-term pain for what i think will be long-term gain. if there's any oil company that's worth owning here, it is eog. this firm has some of the best assets in north america, including acreage in the bakken and eagle ford shales, two of the biggest discoveries since prudhoe bay. eog has moved aggressively, probably more than any other company i follow. together they now account for 84% of the company's revenues. amazing transformation. even though the price of crude may be falling, eog is actually
>>> in the environment where the price of oil seems to be in a free fall, what are we supposed to do when they post a spectacular quarter? eog posted some terrific results last night. nearly rising a buck. should we do this as an opportunity where the markets blind to eog's fabulous fundamentals because they can't see past the falling price of crude, or is it a cautionary sign that no matter how well an oil company does, the stock will never be rewarded as long as the underlying...
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161
Oct 23, 2012
10/12
by
WBAL
tv
eye 161
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or the recreational environment. and it's that confidence. and you talked about passion earlier. the passion for our products across our consumer base is really unabated throughout the year, even if we have seen economies in parts of the world slow down. >> what is the technology in the ranger 900, the side by side, and what is the technology in the 2013 pro rmk sled that makes it so that you say i got to get one of those? >> the pro rmk sled was just awarded the snow goer sled of the year for 2013. i had a chance to go out and ride it quite a bit last winter. and again, it performs on the top of a mountain as well as any sled, in fact, any sled that has ever been built. we have taken a lot of weight out. interestingly, for that customer, having the horsepower to weight ratio is key. and the way that our engineers dial the chassis in to let that consumer and that rider do exactly what they want to do on the mountain is really the key. and really, the same for the ranger 900. that's our tag line for the ranger product
or the recreational environment. and it's that confidence. and you talked about passion earlier. the passion for our products across our consumer base is really unabated throughout the year, even if we have seen economies in parts of the world slow down. >> what is the technology in the ranger 900, the side by side, and what is the technology in the 2013 pro rmk sled that makes it so that you say i got to get one of those? >> the pro rmk sled was just awarded the snow goer sled of...